Network Working Group                                         T. Kivinen
Request for Comments: 3947                                       SafeNet
Category: Standards Track                                     B. Swander
                                                              Microsoft
                                                            A. Huttunen
                                                   F-Secure Corporation
                                                               V. Volpe
                                                          Cisco Systems
                                                           January 2005


               Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

Abstract

  This document describes how to detect one or more network address
  translation devices (NATs) between IPsec hosts, and how to negotiate
  the use of UDP encapsulation of IPsec packets through NAT boxes in
  Internet Key Exchange (IKE).




















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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
  2.  Specification of Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
  3.  Phase 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
      3.1.  Detecting Support of NAT-Traversal. . . . . . . . . . . . 4
      3.2.  Detecting the Presence of NAT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
  4.  Changing to New Ports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
  5.  Quick Mode. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
      5.1.  Negotiation of the NAT-Traversal Encapsulation. . . . . . 9
      5.2.  Sending the Original Source and Destination Addresses . . 9
  6.  Initial Contact Notifications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
  7.  Recovering from the Expiring NAT Mappings. . . . . . . . . . . 11
  8.  Security Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
  9.  IANA Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
  10. IAB Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
  11. Acknowledgments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
  12. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
      12.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
      12.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
  Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
  Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

1.  Introduction

  This document is split into two parts.  The first describes what is
  needed in IKE Phase 1 for NAT-Traversal support.  This includes
  detecting whether the other end supports NAT-Traversal, and detecting
  whether there is one or more NATs between the peers.

  The second part describes how to negotiate the use of UDP
  encapsulated IPsec packets in IKE's Quick Mode.  It also describes
  how to transmit the original source and destination addresses to the
  peer, if required.  These addresses are used in transport mode to
  update the TCP/IP checksums incrementally so that they will match
  after the NAT transform.  (The NAT cannot do this, because the TCP/IP
  checksum is inside the UDP encapsulated IPsec packet.)

  The document [RFC3948] describes the details of UDP encapsulation,
  and [RFC3715] provides background information and motivation of NAT-
  Traversal in general.  In combination with [RFC3948], this document
  represents an "unconditionally compliant" solution to the
  requirements as defined by [RFC3715].

  In the basic scenario for this document, the initiator is behind
  NA(P)T, and the responder has a fixed static IP address.





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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


  This document defines a protocol that will work even if both ends are
  behind NAT, but the process of how to locate the other end is out of
  the scope of this document.  In one scenario, the responder is behind
  a static host NAT (only one responder per IP, as there is no way to
  use any destination ports other than 500/4500).  That is, it is known
  by the configuration.

2.  Specification of Requirements

  This document shall use the keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",
  "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED, "MAY",
  and "OPTIONAL" to describe requirements.  They are to be interpreted
  as described in [RFC2119].

3.  Phase 1

  The detection of support for NAT-Traversal and detection of NAT along
  the path between the two IKE peers occurs in IKE [RFC2409] Phase 1.

  The NAT may change the IKE UDP source port, and recipients MUST be
  able to process IKE packets whose source port is different from 500.
  The NAT does not have to change the source port if:

  o  only one IPsec host is behind the NAT, or

  o  for the first IPsec host, the NAT can keep the port 500, and the
     NAT will only change the port number for later connections.

  Recipients MUST reply back to the source address from the packet (see
  [RFC3715], section 2.1, case d).  This means that when the original
  responder is doing rekeying or sending notifications to the original
  initiator, it MUST send the packets using the same set of port and IP
  numbers used when the IKE SA was last used.

  For example, when the initiator sends a packet with source and
  destination port 500, the NAT may change it to a packet with source
  port 12312 and destination port 500.  The responder must be able to
  process the packet whose source port is 12312.  It must reply back
  with a packet whose source port is 500 and destination port is 12312.
  The NAT will then translate this packet to source port 500 and
  destination port 500.










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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


3.1.  Detecting Support of NAT-Traversal

  The NAT-Traversal capability of the remote host is determined by an
  exchange of vendor ID payloads.  In the first two messages of Phase
  1, the vendor id payload for this specification MUST be sent if
  supported (and it MUST be received by both sides) for the NAT-
  Traversal probe to continue. The content of the payload is the MD5
  hash of

     RFC 3947

  The exact content in hex for the payload is

     4a131c81070358455c5728f20e95452f

3.2.  Detecting the Presence of NAT

  The NAT-D payload not only detects the presence of NAT between the
  two IKE peers, but also detects where the NAT is.  The location of
  the NAT device is important, as the keepalives have to initiate from
  the peer "behind" the NAT.

  To detect NAT between the two hosts, we have to detect whether the IP
  address or the port changes along the path.  This is done by sending
  the hashes of the IP addresses and ports of both IKE peers from each
  end to the other.  If both ends calculate those hashes and get same
  result, they know there is no NAT between.  If the hashes do not
  match, somebody has translated the address or port.  This means that
  we have to do NAT-Traversal to get IPsec packets through.

  If the sender of the packet does not know his own IP address (in case
  of multiple interfaces, and the implementation does not know which IP
  address is used to route the packet out), the sender can include
  multiple local hashes to the packet (as separate NAT-D payloads).  In
  this case, NAT is detected if and only if none of the hashes match.

  The hashes are sent as a series of NAT-D (NAT discovery) payloads.
  Each payload contains one hash, so in case of multiple hashes,
  multiple NAT-D payloads are sent.  In the normal case there are only
  two NAT-D payloads.

  The NAT-D payloads are included in the third and fourth packets of
  Main Mode, and in the second and third packets in the Aggressive
  Mode.







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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


  The format of the NAT-D packet is

       1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
     +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
     | Next Payload  | RESERVED      | Payload length                |
     +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
     ~                 HASH of the address and port                  ~
     +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+

  The payload type for the NAT discovery payload is 20.

  The HASH is calculated as follows:

        HASH = HASH(CKY-I | CKY-R | IP | Port)

  This uses the negotiated HASH algorithm.  All data inside the HASH is
  in the network byte-order.  The IP is 4 octets for an IPv4 address
  and 16 octets for an IPv6 address.  The port number is encoded as a 2
  octet number in network byte-order.  The first NAT-D payload contains
  the remote end's IP address and port (i.e., the destination address
  of the UDP packet).  The remaining NAT-D payloads contain possible
  local-end IP addresses and ports (i.e., all possible source addresses
  of the UDP packet).

  If there is no NAT between the peers, the first NAT-D payload
  received should match one of the local NAT-D payloads (i.e., the
  local NAT-D payloads this host is sending out), and one of the other
  NAT-D payloads must match the remote end's IP address and port.  If
  the first check fails (i.e., first NAT-D payload does not match any
  of the local IP addresses and ports), it means that there is dynamic
  NAT between the peers, and this end should start sending keepalives
  as defined in the [RFC3948] (this end is behind the NAT).

  The CKY-I and CKY-R are the initiator and responder cookies.  They
  are added to the hash to make precomputation attacks for the IP
  address and port impossible.

  The following example is of a Phase 1 exchange using NAT-Traversal in
  Main Mode (authentication with signatures):

  Initiator                           Responder
  ------------                        ------------
  HDR, SA, VID -->
                                      <-- HDR, SA, VID
  HDR, KE, Ni, NAT-D, NAT-D -->
                                      <-- HDR, KE, Nr, NAT-D, NAT-D
  HDR*#, IDii, [CERT, ] SIG_I -->
                                      <-- HDR*#, IDir, [CERT, ], SIG_R



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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


  The following example is of Phase 1 exchange using NAT-Traversal in
  Aggressive Mode (authentication with signatures):

  Initiator                           Responder
  ------------                        ------------
  HDR, SA, KE, Ni, IDii, VID -->
                                      <-- HDR, SA, KE, Nr, IDir,
                                              [CERT, ], VID, NAT-D,
                                              NAT-D, SIG_R
  HDR*#, [CERT, ], NAT-D, NAT-D,
      SIG_I -->

  The # sign indicates that those packets are sent to the changed port
  if NAT is detected.

4.  Changing to New Ports

  IPsec-aware NATs can cause problems (See [RFC3715], section 2.3).
  Some NATs will not change IKE source port 500 even if there are
  multiple clients behind the NAT (See [RFC3715], section 2.3, case n).
  They can also use IKE cookies to demultiplex traffic instead of using
  the source port (See [RFC3715], section 2.3, case m).  Both of these
  are problematic for generic NAT transparency, as it is difficult for
  IKE to discover the capabilities of the NAT.  The best approach is
  simply to move the IKE traffic off port 500 as soon as possible to
  avoid any IPsec-aware NAT special casing.

  Take the common case of the initiator behind the NAT.  The initiator
  must quickly change to port 4500 once the NAT has been detected to
  minimize the window of IPsec-aware NAT problems.

  In Main Mode, the initiator MUST change ports when sending the ID
  payload if there is NAT between the hosts.  The initiator MUST set
  both UDP source and destination ports to 4500.  All subsequent
  packets sent to this peer (including informational notifications)
  MUST be sent on port 4500.  In addition, the IKE data MUST be
  prepended with a non-ESP marker allowing for demultiplexing of
  traffic, as defined in [RFC3948].

  Thus, the IKE packet now looks like this:

        IP UDP(4500,4500) <non-ESP marker> HDR*, IDii, [CERT, ] SIG_I

  This assumes authentication using signatures.  The 4 bytes of non-ESP
  marker are defined in the [RFC3948].






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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


  When the responder gets this packet, the usual decryption and
  processing of the various payloads is performed.  If these are
  successful, the responder MUST update local state so that all
  subsequent packets (including informational notifications) to the
  peer use the new port, and possibly the new IP address obtained from
  the incoming valid packet.  The port will generally be different, as
  the NAT will map UDP(500,500) to UDP(X,500), and UDP(4500,4500) to
  UDP(Y,4500).  The IP address will seldom be different from the pre-
  changed IP address.  The responder MUST respond with all subsequent
  IKE packets to this peer by using UDP(4500,Y).

  Similarly, if the responder has to rekey the Phase 1 SA, then the
  rekey negotiation MUST be started by using UDP(4500,Y).  Any
  implementation that supports NAT traversal MUST support negotiations
  that begin on port 4500.  If a negotiation starts on port 4500, then
  it doesn't need to change anywhere else in the exchange.

  Once port change has occurred, if a packet is received on port 500,
  that packet is old.  If the packet is an informational packet, it MAY
  be processed if local policy allows this.  If the packet is a Main
  Mode or an Aggressive Mode packet (with the same cookies as previous
  packets), it SHOULD be discarded.  If the packet is a new Main Mode
  or Aggressive exchange, then it is processed normally (the other end
  might have rebooted, and this is starting new exchange).

  Here is an example of a Phase 1 exchange using NAT-Traversal in Main
  Mode (authentication with signatures) with changing port:

  Initiator                           Responder
  ------------                        ------------
  UDP(500,500) HDR, SA, VID -->
                                      <-- UDP(500,X) HDR, SA, VID
  UDP(500,500) HDR, KE, Ni,
      NAT-D, NAT-D -->
                                      <-- UDP(500,X) HDR, KE, Nr,
                                              NAT-D, NAT-D
  UDP(4500,4500) HDR*#, IDii,
      [CERT, ]SIG_I -->
                                      <-- UDP(4500,Y) HDR*#, IDir,
                                              [ CERT, ], SIG_R

  The procedure for Aggressive Mode is very similar.  After the NAT has
  been detected, the initiator sends IP UDP(4500,4500) <4 bytes of
  non-ESP marker> HDR*, [CERT, ], NAT-D, NAT-D, and SIG_I.  The
  responder does similar processing to the above, and if successful,
  MUST update it's internal IKE ports.  The responder MUST respond with
  all subsequent IKE packets to this peer by using UDP(4500,Y).




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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


  Initiator                           Responder
  ------------                        ------------
  UDP(500,500) HDR, SA, KE,
      Ni, IDii, VID -->
                                      <-- UDP(500,X) HDR, SA, KE,
                                              Nr, IDir, [CERT, ],
                                              VID, NAT-D, NAT-D,
                                              SIG_R
  UDP(4500,4500) HDR*#, [CERT, ],
      NAT-D, NAT-D,
      SIG_I -->
                                      <-- UDP(4500, Y) HDR*#, ...

  If the support of the NAT-Traversal is enabled, the port in the ID
  payload in Main Mode/Aggressive Mode MUST be set to 0.

  The most common case for the responder behind the NAT is if the NAT
  is simply doing 1:1 address translation.  In this case, the initiator
  still changes both ports to 4500.  The responder uses an algorithm
  identical to that above, although in this case Y will equal 4500, as
  no port translation is happening.

  A different port change case involves out-of-band discovery of the
  ports to use.  Those discovery methods are out of the scope of this
  document.  For instance, if the responder is behind a port
  translating NAT, and the initiator needs to contact it first, then
  the initiator will have to determine which ports to use, usually by
  contacting some other server.  Once the initiator knows which ports
  to use to traverse the NAT, generally something like UDP(Z,4500), it
  initiates using these ports.  This is similar to the responder rekey
  case above in that the ports to use are already known up front, and
  no additional change has to take place.  Also, the first keepalive
  timer starts after the change to the new port, and no keepalives are
  sent to the port 500.

5.  Quick Mode

  After Phase 1, both ends know whether there is a NAT present between
  them.  The final decision of using NAT-Traversal is left to Quick
  Mode.  The use of NAT-Traversal is negotiated inside the SA payloads
  of Quick Mode.  In Quick Mode, both ends can also send the original
  addresses of the IPsec packets (in case of the transport mode) to the
  other end so that each can fix the TCP/IP checksum field after the
  NAT transformation.







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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


5.1.  Negotiation of the NAT-Traversal Encapsulation

  The negotiation of the NAT-Traversal happens by adding two new
  encapsulation modes.  These encapsulation modes are

  UDP-Encapsulated-Tunnel         3
  UDP-Encapsulated-Transport      4

  It is not normally useful to propose both normal tunnel or transport
  mode and UDP-Encapsulated modes.  UDP encapsulation is required to
  fix the inability to handle non-UDP/TCP traffic by NATs (see
  [RFC3715], section 2.2, case i).

  If there is a NAT box between hosts, normal tunnel or transport
  encapsulations may not work.  In this case, UDP-Encapsulation SHOULD
  be used.

  If there is no NAT box between, there is no point in wasting
  bandwidth by adding UDP encapsulation of packets.  Thus, UDP-
  Encapsulation SHOULD NOT be used.

  Also, the initiator SHOULD NOT include both normal tunnel or
  transport mode and UDP-Encapsulated-Tunnel or UDP-Encapsulated-
  Transport in its proposals.

5.2.  Sending the Original Source and Destination Addresses

  To perform incremental TCP checksum updates, both peers may need to
  know the original IP addresses used by their peers when those peers
  constructed the packet (see [RFC3715], section 2.1, case b).  For the
  initiator, the original Initiator address is defined to be the
  Initiator's IP address.  The original Responder address is defined to
  be the perceived peer's IP address.  For the responder, the original
  Initiator address is defined to be the perceived peer's address.  The
  original Responder address is defined to be the Responder's IP
  address.

  The original addresses are sent by using NAT-OA (NAT Original
  Address) payloads.

  The Initiator NAT-OA payload is first.  The Responder NAT-OA payload
  is second.

  Example 1:

        Initiator <---------> NAT <---------> Responder
                 ^               ^           ^
               Iaddr           NatPub      Raddr



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  The initiator is behind a NAT talking to the publicly available
  responder.  Initiator and Responder have the IP addresses Iaddr and
  Raddr.  NAT has public IP address NatPub.

  Initiator:

                    NAT-OAi = Iaddr
                    NAT-OAr = Raddr

  Responder:
                    NAT-OAi = NATPub
                    NAT-OAr = Raddr

  Example 2:

        Initiator <------> NAT1 <---------> NAT2 <-------> Responder
                 ^             ^           ^              ^
               Iaddr        Nat1Pub     Nat2Pub         Raddr

  Here, NAT2 "publishes" Nat2Pub for Responder and forwards all traffic
  to that address to Responder.

  Initiator:
                    NAT-OAi = Iaddr
                    NAT-OAr = Nat2Pub

  Responder:
                    NAT-OAi = Nat1Pub
                    NAT-OAr = Raddr

  In the case of transport mode, both ends MUST send both original
  Initiator and Responder addresses to the other end.  For tunnel mode,
  both ends SHOULD NOT send original addresses to the other end.

  The NAT-OA payloads are sent inside the first and second packets of
  Quick Mode.  The initiator MUST send the payloads if it proposes any
  UDP-Encapsulated-Transport mode, and the responder MUST send the
  payload only if it selected UDP-Encapsulated-Transport mode.  It is
  possible that the initiator sends the NAT-OA payload but proposes
  both UDP-Encapsulated transport and tunnel mode.  Then the responder
  selects the UDP-Encapsulated tunnel mode and does not send the NAT-OA
  payload back.









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  The format of the NAT-OA packet is

        1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
      +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
      | Next Payload  | RESERVED      | Payload length                |
      +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
      | ID Type       | RESERVED      | RESERVED                      |
      +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
      |           IPv4 (4 octets) or IPv6 address (16 octets)         |
      +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+

  The payload type for the NAT original address payload is 21.

  The ID type is defined in the [RFC2407].  Only ID_IPV4_ADDR and
  ID_IPV6_ADDR types are allowed.  The two reserved fields after the ID
  Type must be zero.

  The following example is of Quick Mode using NAT-OA payloads:

  Initiator                           Responder
  ------------                        ------------
  HDR*, HASH(1), SA, Ni, [, KE]
      [, IDci, IDcr ]
      [, NAT-OAi, NAT-OAr] -->
                                      <-- HDR*, HASH(2), SA, Nr, [, KE]
                                                [, IDci, IDcr ]
                                                [, NAT-OAi, NAT-OAr]
  HDR*, HASH(3) -->

6.  Initial Contact Notifications

  The source IP and port address of the INITIAL-CONTACT notification
  for the host behind NAT are not meaningful (as NAT can change them),
  so the IP and port numbers MUST NOT be used to determine which
  IKE/IPsec SAs to remove (see [RFC3715], section 2.1, case c).  The ID
  payload sent from the other end SHOULD be used instead; i.e., when an
  INITIAL-CONTACT notification is received from the other end, the
  receiving end SHOULD remove all the SAs associated with the same ID
  payload.

7.  Recovering from the Expiring NAT Mappings

  There are cases where NAT box decides to remove mappings that are
  still alive (for example, when the keepalive interval is too long, or
  when the NAT box is rebooted).  To recover from this, ends that are
  NOT behind NAT SHOULD use the last valid UDP encapsulated IKE or
  IPsec packet from the other end to determine which IP and port
  addresses should be used.  The host behind dynamic NAT MUST NOT do



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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


  this, as otherwise it opens a DoS attack possibility because the IP
  address or port of the other host will not change (it is not behind
  NAT).

  Keepalives cannot be used for these purposes, as they are not
  authenticated, but any IKE authenticated IKE packet or ESP packet can
  be used to detect whether the IP address or the port has changed.

8.  Security Considerations

  Whenever changes to some fundamental parts of a security protocol are
  proposed, the examination of security implications cannot be skipped.
  Therefore, here are some observations about the effects, and about
  whether or not these effects matter.

  o  IKE probes reveal NAT-Traversal support to anyone watching the
     traffic.  Disclosing that NAT-Traversal is supported does not
     introduce new vulnerabilities.

  o  The value of authentication mechanisms based on IP addresses
     disappears once NATs are in the picture.  That is not necessarily
     a bad thing (for any real security, authentication measures other
     than IP addresses should be used).  This means that authentication
     with pre-shared keys cannot be used in Main Mode without using
     group-shared keys for everybody behind the NAT box.  Using group
     shared keys is a huge risk because it allows anyone in the group
     to authenticate to any other party and claim to be anybody in the
     group; e.g., a normal user could impersonate a vpn-gateway and act
     as a man in the middle, and read/modify all traffic to/from others
     in the group.  Use of group-shared keys is NOT RECOMMENDED.

  o  As the internal address space is only 32 bits and is usually very
     sparse, it might be possible for the attacker to find out the
     internal address used behind the NAT box by trying all possible
     IP-addresses to find the matching hash.  The port numbers are
     normally fixed to 500, and the cookies can be extracted from the
     packet.  This limits the hash calculations to 2^32.  If an
     educated guess of the private address space is made, then the
     number of hash calculations needed to find out the internal IP
     address goes down to 2^24 + 2 * (2^16).

  o  Neither NAT-D payloads nor Vendor ID payloads are authenticated in
     Main Mode nor in Aggressive Mode.  This means that attacker can
     remove those payloads, modify them, or add them.  By removing or
     adding them, the attacker can cause Denial of Service attacks.  By
     modifying the NAT-D packets, the attacker can cause both ends to
     use UDP-Encapsulated modes instead of directly using tunnel or
     transport mode, thus wasting some bandwidth.



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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


  o  Sending the original source address in the Quick Mode reveals the
     internal IP address behind the NAT to the other end.  In this case
     we have already authenticated the other end, and sending the
     original source address is only needed in transport mode.

  o  Updating the IKE SA/ESP UDP encapsulation IP addresses and ports
     for each valid authenticated packet can cause DoS if an attacker
     can listen to all traffic in the network, change the order of the
     packets, and inject new packets before the packet he has already
     seen.  In other words, the attacker can take an authenticated
     packet from the host behind NAT, change the packet UDP source or
     destination ports or IP addresses and send it out to the other end
     before the real packet reaches it.  The host not behind the NAT
     will update its IP address and port mapping and send further
     traffic to the wrong host or port.  This situation is fixed
     immediately when the attacker stops modifying the packets, as the
     first real packet will fix the situation.  Implementations SHOULD
     AUDIT the event every time the mapping is changed, as it should
     not happen that often.

9.  IANA Considerations

  This document contains two new "magic numbers" allocated from the
  existing IANA registry for IPsec and renames existing registered port
  4500.  This document also defines 2 new payload types for IKE.

  The following are new items that have been added in the "Internet
  Security Association and Key Management Protocol (ISAKMP)
  Identifiers" Encapsulation Mode registry:

        Name                         Value Reference
        ----                         ----- ---------
        UDP-Encapsulated-Tunnel       3    [RFC3947]
        UDP-Encapsulated-Transport    4    [RFC3947]

  Change in the registered port registry:

        Keyword       Decimal    Description          Reference
        -------       -------    -----------          ---------
        ipsec-nat-t   4500/tcp   IPsec NAT-Traversal  [RFC3947]
        ipsec-nat-t   4500/udp   IPsec NAT-Traversal  [RFC3947]










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  New IKE payload numbers need to be added to the Next Payload Types
  registry:

        NAT-D         20         NAT Discovery Payload
        NAT-OA        21         NAT Original Address Payload

10.  IAB Considerations

  The UNSAF [RFC3424] questions are addressed by the IPsec-NAT
  compatibility requirements document [RFC3715].

11.  Acknowledgments

  Thanks to Markus Stenberg, Larry DiBurro, and William Dixon, who
  contributed actively to this document.

  Thanks to Tatu Ylonen, Santeri Paavolainen, and Joern Sierwald, who
  contributed to the document used as the base for this document.

12.  References

12.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2409] Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange
            (IKE)", RFC 2409, November 1998.

  [RFC2407] Piper, D., "The Internet IP Security Domain of
            Interpretation for ISAKMP", RFC 2407, November 1998.

  [RFC3948] Huttunen, A., Swander, B., Volpe, V., DiBurro, L., and M.
            Stenberg, "UDP Encapsulation of IPsec Packets", RFC 3948,
            January 2005.

  [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

12.2.  Informative References

  [RFC3715] Aboba, B. and W. Dixon, "IPsec-Network Address Translation
            (NAT) Compatibility Requirements", RFC 3715, March 2004.

  [RFC3424] Daigle, L. and IAB, "IAB Considerations for UNilateral
            Self-Address Fixing (UNSAF) Across Network Address
            Translation", RFC 3424, November 2002.







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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


Authors' Addresses

  Tero Kivinen
  SafeNet, Inc.
  Fredrikinkatu 47
  FIN-00100 HELSINKI
  Finland

  EMail: [email protected]


  Ari Huttunen
  F-Secure Corporation
  Tammasaarenkatu 7,
  FIN-00181 HELSINKI
  Finland

  EMail: [email protected]


  Brian Swander
  Microsoft
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA 98052
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Victor Volpe
  Cisco Systems
  124 Grove Street
  Suite 205
  Franklin, MA 02038
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]














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RFC 3947        Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE     January 2005


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